Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/11452/33873
Title: First report of Adoxophyes orana in northwestern Turkey: Population fluctuation and damage on different host plants
Authors: Uludağ Üniversitesi/Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü.
Uludağ Üniversitesi/Ziraat Fakültesi/Bitki Koruma Bölümü.
Pehlevan, Bilgi
Kovancı, Orkun Barış
AAH-2039-2021
56394582800
12759314200
Keywords: Adoxophyes orana
Turkey
Degree-days
Summer fruit tortrix moth
Fruit orchard
New pest
Bursa [Turkey]
Turkey
Adoxophyes orana
Lepidoptera
Tortrix
Orchards
Adoxophyes orana
Degree days
New pest
Summer fruit tortrix moth
Lepidoptera-tortricidae
Lep
Northern greece
Photoperiod
Flight activity
Moth
Fruits
Flight behavior
Host-parasite interaction
Summer
Moth
Species occurrence
Orchard
Pheromone trap
Pest damage
Pest species
Agriculture
Forestry
Issue Date: 14-Jun-2014
Publisher: TÜBİTAK
Citation: Pehlevan, B. ve Kovancı, O. B. (2014). "First report of Adoxophyes orana in northwestern Turkey: Population fluctuation and damage on different host plants". Turkish Journal of Agriculture and Forestry, 38(6), 847-856.
Abstract: This study reports the presence of the summer fruit tortrix moth, Adoxophyes orana, in pome and stone fruit orchards for the first time in northwestern Turkey. Based on growers' complaints about cosmetic damage to peach and pear fruits, pheromone traps were set up in mid-April of 2009 and 2010 to monitor the occurrence of the summer fruit tortrix moth. We conducted studies in conventional apple, pear, peach, and sweet cherry orchards in Bursa, northwestern Turkey. Moths caught in pheromone traps showed a trimodal flight pattern in all orchards. However, both moth emergence time and total flight period varied among host plants. The first moths were caught in peach and apple orchards on 13 May in 2009 and 3 May in 2010, corresponding to an average degree-day (DD) accumulation of 350-356 DD starting from 1 February. The 2nd and 3rd moth flights began in late June or early July (1003-1027 DD) and early August (1600-1690 DD), respectively. Moth captures continued until the end of September, lasting for an average of 2305 DD. The highest mean percentage leaf damage (9.3%) was found in sweet cherry orchards. However, neither sweet cherry nor apple fruits were injured in any way by A. orana larvae. Conversely, the mean percentage of fruit infested with larvae was 1.4% and 0.8% in peach and pear orchards, respectively. Because a level of fruit damage higher than 1% is considered the control threshold, A. orana is more likely to cause economic damage in peach and pear orchards in the near future.
URI: https://doi.org/10.3906/tar-1402-11
https://journals.tubitak.gov.tr/agriculture/vol38/iss6/9/
http://hdl.handle.net/11452/33873
ISSN: 1300-011X
1303-6173
Appears in Collections:Scopus
TrDizin
Web of Science

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